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Name - Mukesh Singh Rawat Course - B.C.A 6 B Roll NO - 21

The document provides an overview of the Python programming language including its history, key features, syntax, types, semantics, and common uses. It discusses Python's simplicity, ease of learning, open source nature, portability, object-oriented approach, and extensive standard libraries. Timelines of Python's development and some of its major releases are also presented.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views17 pages

Name - Mukesh Singh Rawat Course - B.C.A 6 B Roll NO - 21

The document provides an overview of the Python programming language including its history, key features, syntax, types, semantics, and common uses. It discusses Python's simplicity, ease of learning, open source nature, portability, object-oriented approach, and extensive standard libraries. Timelines of Python's development and some of its major releases are also presented.

Uploaded by

atul211988
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as ODP, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Name – Mukesh Singh Rawat

Course – B.C.A 6th B


Roll NO - 21

10/01/20 CS 331 1
python
• Simple
– Python is a simple and minimalistic language in nature
– Reading a good python program should be like reading English
– Its Pseudo-code nature allows one to concentrate on the problem
rather than the language
• Easy to Learn
• Free & Open source
– Freely distributed and Open source
– Maintained by the Python community
• High Level Language –memory management
• Portable – *runs on anything c code will

10/01/20 CS 331 2
python
• Interpreted
– You run the program straight from the source code.
– Python program Bytecode a platforms native language
– You can just copy over your code to another system and it will auto-
magically work! *with python platform
• Object-Oriented
– Simple and additionally supports procedural programming
• Extensible – easily import other code
• Embeddable –easily place your code in non-python programs
• Extensive libraries
– (i.e. reg. expressions, doc generation, CGI, ftp, web browsers, ZIP, WAV,
cryptography, etc...) (wxPython, Twisted, Python Imaging library)

10/01/20 CS 331 3
python Timeline/History
• Python was conceived in the late 1980s.
– Guido van Rossum, Benevolent Dictator For Life
– Rossum is Dutch, born in Netherlands, Christmas break
bored, big fan of Monty python’s Flying Circus
– Descendant of ABC, he wrote glob() func in UNIX
– M.D. @ U of Amsterdam, worked for CWI, NIST, CNRI, Google
– Also, helped develop the ABC programming language
• In 1991 python 0.9.0 was published and reached the masses
through alt.sources
• In January of 1994 python 1.0 was released
– Functional programming tools like lambda, map, filter, and reduce
– comp.lang.python formed, greatly increasing python’s userbase

10/01/20 CS 331 4
python Timeline/History
• In 1995, python 1.2 was released.
• By version 1.4 python had several new features
– Keyword arguments (similar to those of common lisp)
– Built-in support for complex numbers
– Basic form of data-hiding through name mangling (easily bypassed
however)
• Computer Programming for Everybody (CP4E) initiative
– Make programming accessible to more people, with basic “literacy” similar to
those required for English and math skills for some jobs.
– Project was funded by DARPA
– CP4E was inactive as of 2007, not so much a concern to get employees
programming “literate”

10/01/20 CS 331 5
python Timeline/History
• In 2000, Python 2.0 was released.
– Introduced list comprehensions similar to Haskells
– Introduced garbage collection
• In 2001, Python 2.2 was released.
– Included unification of types and classes into one
hierarchy, making pythons object model purely Object-
oriented
– Generators were added(function-like iterator behavior)
• Standards
– http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
10/01/20 CS 331 6
Python types
• Str, unicode – ‘MyString’, u‘MyString’
• List – [ 69, 6.9, ‘mystring’, True]
• Tuple – (69, 6.9, ‘mystring’, True) immutable
• Set/frozenset – set([69, 6.9, ‘str’, True])
frozenset([69, 6.9, ‘str’, True]) –no duplicates
& unordered
• Dictionary or hash – {‘key 1’: 6.9, ‘key2’: False}
- group of key and value pairs
10/01/20 CS 331 7
Python types
• Int – 42- may be transparently expanded to
long through 438324932L
• Float – 2.171892
• Complex – 4 + 3j
• Bool – True of False

10/01/20 CS 331 8
Python semantics
• Each statement has its own semantics, the def
statement doesn’t get executed immediately like
other statements
• Python uses duck typing, or latent typing
– Allows for polymorphism without inheritance
– This means you can just declare
“somevariable = 69” don’t actually have to declare a type
– print “somevariable = “ + tostring(somevariable)”
strong typing , can’t do operations on objects not defined
without explicitly asking the operation to be done

10/01/20 CS 331 9
Python Syntax
• Python uses indentation and/or whitespace to delimit
statement blocks rather than keywords or braces
• if __name__ == "__main__":
print “Salve Mundo"
# if no comma (,) at end ‘\n’ is auto-included
CONDITIONALS
• if (i == 1): do_something1()
elif (i == 2): do_something2()
elif (i == 3): do_something3()
else: do_something4()

10/01/20 CS 331 10
Conditionals Cont.
• if (value is not None) and (value == 1):
print "value equals 1”,
print “ more can come in this block”
• if (list1 <= list2) and (not age < 80):
print “1 = 1, 2 = 2, but 3 <= 7 so its True”
• if (job == "millionaire") or (state != "dead"):
print "a suitable husband found"
else:
print "not suitable“
• if ok: print "ok"

10/01/20 CS 331 11
Loops/Iterations
• sentence = ['Marry','had','a','little','lamb']
for word in sentence:
print word, len(word)
• for i in range(10):
print I
for i in xrange(1000):# does not allocate all initially
print I
• while True:
pass
• for i in xrange(10):
if i == 3: continue
if i == 5: break
print i,

10/01/20 CS 331 12
Functions
• def print_hello():# returns nothing
print “hello”
• def has_args(arg1,arg2=['e', 0]):
num = arg1 + 4
mylist = arg2 + ['a',7]
return [num, mylist]
has_args(5.16,[1,'b'])# returns [9.16,[[1, ‘b’],[ ‘a’,7]]
• def duplicate_n_maker(n): #lambda on the fly func.
return lambda arg1:arg1*n
dup3 = duplicate_n_maker(3)
dup_str = dup3('go') # dup_str == 'gogogo'

10/01/20 CS 331 13
So what does Python have to do with
Internet and web programming?
• Jython & IronPython(.NET ,written in C#)
• Libraries – ftplib, snmplib, uuidlib, smtpd, urlparse,
SimpleHTTPServer, cgi, telnetlib, cookielib, xmlrpclib,
SimpleXMLRPCServer, DocXMLRPCServer
• Zope(application server), PyBloxsom(blogger),
MoinMoin(wiki), Trac(enhanced wiki and tracking
system), and Bittorrent (6 no, but prior versions yes)

10/01/20 CS 331 14
Python Interpreters
• http://www.python.org/download/
• http://pyaiml.sourceforge.net/
• http://www.py2exe.org/
• http://www.activestate.com/Products/activepython/
• http://www.wingware.com/
• http://pythonide.blogspot.com/
• Many more…

10/01/20 CS 331 15
Python on your systems
– Its easy! Go to http://www.python.org/download/
– Download your architecture binary, or source
– Install, make, build whatever you need to do…
plenty of info on installation in readmes
– Make your first program! (a simple on like the hello
world one will do just fine)
– Two ways of running python code. Either in an
interpreter or in a file ran as an executable

10/01/20 CS 331 16
Python for the future
• Python 3.0
– Will not be Backwards compatible, they are
attempting to fix “perceived” security flaws.
– Print statement will become a print function.
– All text strings will be unicode.
– Support of optional function annotation, that can
be used for informal type declarations and other
purposes.

10/01/20 CS 331 17

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